The California Supreme Court held that the first situation involves such a powerful use of authority that the city employing the officer can be held vicariously liable for his sexual torts. However, in Doe 1 v. City of Murrieta, the California Court of Appeal decided that the City cannot be held vicariously liable in the second situation
Case law on tort liability of public officers and employees is much more interesting than one might ...
In Young v. Weston, the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington struck down Washi...
Sex offender residency restrictions in the United States became ubiquitous throughout state and coun...
The locus classicus and trend-setting decision for the vicarious liability of the state for the rape...
Professor Kenneth Davis has long advocated that police manuals should be viewed as interpretative ad...
Defendant was stopped on a public sidewalk by a police officer and asked to identify himself and acc...
This Casenote questions the holding in People v. Hicks, a California Supreme Court decision in Decem...
There are many communications an officer of the law makes during the discharge of his duty. Some of ...
This article summarizes and analyzes municipal immunity from liability for torts committed by police...
The AIDS epidemic has brought one of our most fundamental constitutional rights into sharp focus in ...
Police executed a search warrant at John Rosky’s apartment as part of an investigation into the sexu...
The U.S. Supreme Court deserves some of the blame for the problem of police misconduct, including of...
The California Supreme Court, in Hubbard v. Boelt, extended the reach of the fireman\u27s rule to ba...
In Ashley v Chief Constable of Sussex, the House of Lords ruled that a civil claim in trespass to th...
In 1997, the Supreme Court held that the sexually violent predator (SVP) act in Kansas did not viola...
Case law on tort liability of public officers and employees is much more interesting than one might ...
In Young v. Weston, the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington struck down Washi...
Sex offender residency restrictions in the United States became ubiquitous throughout state and coun...
The locus classicus and trend-setting decision for the vicarious liability of the state for the rape...
Professor Kenneth Davis has long advocated that police manuals should be viewed as interpretative ad...
Defendant was stopped on a public sidewalk by a police officer and asked to identify himself and acc...
This Casenote questions the holding in People v. Hicks, a California Supreme Court decision in Decem...
There are many communications an officer of the law makes during the discharge of his duty. Some of ...
This article summarizes and analyzes municipal immunity from liability for torts committed by police...
The AIDS epidemic has brought one of our most fundamental constitutional rights into sharp focus in ...
Police executed a search warrant at John Rosky’s apartment as part of an investigation into the sexu...
The U.S. Supreme Court deserves some of the blame for the problem of police misconduct, including of...
The California Supreme Court, in Hubbard v. Boelt, extended the reach of the fireman\u27s rule to ba...
In Ashley v Chief Constable of Sussex, the House of Lords ruled that a civil claim in trespass to th...
In 1997, the Supreme Court held that the sexually violent predator (SVP) act in Kansas did not viola...
Case law on tort liability of public officers and employees is much more interesting than one might ...
In Young v. Weston, the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington struck down Washi...
Sex offender residency restrictions in the United States became ubiquitous throughout state and coun...